Centipoise divided by specific gravity is equal to centistokes. Centipoise divided by specific gravity is equal to centistokes. Centipoise divided by specific gravity is equal to centistokes. Centipoise divided by specific gravity is equal to centistokes.
Centipoise is a unit of dynamic viscosity, whereas centistoke is a unit of kinematic viscosity. Kinematic viscosity is the dynamic viscosity divided by density.
So, to convert centipoise to centistokes, you simply divide the value in centipoise by the density (in g/cm^3, to make conversions less messy). Likewise, to convert centistokes into centipoise, you simply multiply the value in centistokes by the density (in g/cm^3).
The units for Pa*s are
1 Pa*s = 1 [N*m-2]*s = 1 [kg*m*s-2]*m-2*s = 1 kg*m-1*s-1
A centistoke is a unit that describes kinematic viscosity and is given by the equation
v=u/p
where v is the Greek nu, u is the Greek mu, and p is the Greek rho. u is dynamic viscosity and p is density. u is in units of centipoise (cP) and p is in units of g*cm-3.
1 cP = 1 mPa*s or 1 cP = 0.001 Pa*s.
You cannot directly get from Pa*s to cSt. You must divide the dynamic viscosity by the density to get kinematic viscosity. Then, the units work out to
1 cSt = [1 cP] / [g*cm-3] = 10-6 * m2*s-1
divide centipoise by the specific gravity
The viscosity of the mantle is estimated to be about 10^21 poise (10^19 Pascal seconds).
The SI unit for viscosity is called the Pascal-Second. The Pascal Second is equivalent to kilogram per meter or (N. s)/m2.
First you have to know the area that the ton is exerting pressure on.
I assume that you mean kg/sq cm to PSI? If that is true then 1 kg/sq cm is 14.223 PSI.
viscosity is the quantity that describes a fluid's resistance to flow. Fluids resist the relative motion of immersed objects through them as well as to the motion of layers with differing velocities within them. Formally, viscosity (represented by the symbol η "eta") is the ratio of the shearing stress (F/A) to the velocity gradient (Δvx/Δz or dvx/dz) in a fluid. η = ⎛⎜⎝ F ⎞⎟⎠ ÷ ⎛⎜⎝ Δvx ⎞⎟⎠ or η = ⎛⎜⎝ F ⎞⎟⎠ ÷ ⎛⎜⎝ dvx ⎞⎟⎠ A Δz A dz The more usual form of this relationship, called Newton's equation, states that the resulting shear of a fluid is directly proportional to the force applied and inversely proportional to its viscosity. The similarity to Newton's second law of motion (F = ma) should be apparent. F = η Δvx or F = η dvxA Δz A dz ⇕ ⇕ F = mΔv or F = m dv Δt dt The SI unit of viscosity is the pascal second [Pa·s], which has no special name. Despite its self-proclaimed title as an international system, the International System of Units has had very little international impact on viscosity. The pascal second is rarely used in scientific and technical publications today. The most common unit of viscosity is the dyne second per square centimeter [dyne·s/cm2], which is given the name poise [P] after the French physiologist Jean Louis Poiseuille (1799-1869). Ten poise equal one pascal second [Pa·s] making the centipoise [cP] and millipascal second [mPa·s] identical. 1 pascal second = 10 poise = 1,000 millipascal second1 centipoise = 1 millipascal second
Viscosity is the measure of a fluids ability to flow, it is measured in pascal-seconds(this link might help)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viscosity#Units
The viscosity of the mantle is estimated to be about 10^21 poise (10^19 Pascal seconds).
250-260 ºC250-260 degrees Celsius
The SI unit for viscosity is called the Pascal-Second. The Pascal Second is equivalent to kilogram per meter or (N. s)/m2.
You have to distinguish dynamic viscosity and kinematic viscosity. Different units are used for both - the standard (SI) unit for dynamic viscosity is Pascal x second, while the unit for kinematic viscosity is meter2/second.
multiply mmwc by 9.81 to get value in pascal
Pascal Convert has written: 'Raymond Aubrac' -- subject(s): Underground movements, Biography, World War, 1939-1945, Statesmen 'Pascal Convert' -- subject(s): Exhibitions
The Si unit for viscosity is Pa·s = kg/(s·m).
From Wikipedia: The viscosity of water is 8.90 × 10−4 Pa·s or 8.90 × 10−3 dyn·s/cm2 or 0.890 cP at about 25 °C.
The Pascal second (Pa s), is the standard SI unit.
What a stupid question. You can't convert things that are units of completely different categories! Kelvin measures temperature while torr measures pressure. They are not related in any way that you can convert them!
1 Pascal = 0.007500617 mm of mercury